Friday, February 6, 2015

Crimes of the South African Police Service


Hijacked, kidnapped, robbed by police – resident 

“I have been in South Africa since 1994. I have never seen police officers behave this way. You read about these things in the paper and never imagine it could happen to you.”
Sechaba Machabe | 7 November 2013



The Cleveland SAPS hopes to establish a forum to address safety at guest houses
These are the words of a 40-year-old Kensington resident, who did not want his name published, after his traumatic ordeal on Langermann Drive on November 1.

The businessman and father of four was allegedly stopped by members of the Johannesburg Flying Squad while driving home from work.

“When I was stopped I thought it was just a routine check, or maybe I had transgressed a traffic law,” said the resident. He said the police officers, in a marked police vehicle, instructed him to stop by sounding the vehicle’s siren. The man stopped his vehicle and the officers, a man and a woman, approached his car.

“The male officers asked to see my licence. I handed it to him. He then told me I was wanted in connection with a robbery in Sandton,” said the resident.

The man was handcuffed, put into the police vehicle and told he was being taken to the Sandton SAPS. “As I was being handcuffed, I noticed a man who looked familiar jump out of the police vehicle. He then walked away,” said the resident.

The female officer climbed into the resident’s vehicle and followed them. She dropped the vehicle off in Parktown and then returned to the police vehicle.

“When we arrived at the station I was not taken inside. I was left in the car in the parking lot behind the station. The male officer went inside the station. He came back and said his superior had instructed him to search my house,” said the resident. The officers apparently drove to the man’s house.

“When we arrived, my wife and children were still awake. The police officers searched the house. They took my son’s tablet device and R15 000. They said the money and tablet were stolen,” said the resident.

The police officers went upstairs where they found some of the goods the man sells. “They put the linen I sell into a bag with the other things they took,” said the resident.
The man was then put back into the police vehicle. “As they drove off, I noticed they were driving past the Jeppe SAPS and Yeoville. They headed towards town,” said the resident. He claims he was denied his right to make a phone call to his wife or lawyer. After driving around with him for a while, they decided to ‘negotiate’ with him.

“They said if I left my goods with them, they would guarantee it gets to their superior and they would share the money among themselves and let me go,” said the resident.

He was driven to his car, handed his car keys and driver’s licence and told to go.

“I then called a friend and went to the Cleveland SAPS to open a case. This was at 4am. The ordeal started at around 8pm,” said the resident.

“I thought they were going to kill me. I pleaded with them, crying and asking them to spare my life,” said the resident. Throughout the ordeal, he kept hoping the officers would realise it was a case of mistaken identity.

“I have not been to Sandton in the last two years. I even asked them to check the tracking device in my vehicle to prove my innocence. They were not interested,” said the resident.

He said the incident has left him traumatised and he now fears for his life as the people who did this know where he lives. He said he could easily identify the police officers if he saw them. When he arrived home, his son apparently asked him if he was a criminal and what he had done wrong.
“We live in dangerous times. This is no place to raise your children. Who do we trust if not the police?” asked the resident. He said he would take this matter as far as he could to see justice served.
Constable Mpho Mashakane, of the Cleveland SAPS, said the man opened a case and it is being investigated. She said police suspect the people who arrested and robbed the resident are not police officers.

“We have gathered enough information to suggest it was not real police officers who conducted these crimes. There have been reports of similar incidents around Kensington and Cyrildene where the same modus operandi was used,” she said.

Spokesperson for the Gauteng SAPS, Colonel Lungelo Dlamini, said it was difficult to differentiate between real officers and impersonators – especially at night.

“A VW Golf 6, resembling a Flying Squad vehicle and used by bogus police officers, was found about two months ago but the suspects managed to escape. The police have a team of investigators tasked with tracking down the impersonators,” said Col Dlamini.

He said in some instances, police members are also being arrested for committing crimes while on duty.

“It is suspected that corrupt members of the service help criminals get police uniforms. There are bogus police officers who have been arrested in the past and are in custody,” said Col Dlamini. He warned members of the public to be cautious when they suspect the people who stop them on the road are not real police officers.

“Residents are advised to drive to a public place, or they can contact the 10111 centre to verify the details of the people posing as police officers,” said Col Dlamini.

He said members of the public must also try to take as many details of the impersonators as possible using their cellular phones, in order for the police to have a way of tracking the imposters down.